In most Latin American revolutions, the colonels lead the fray.
Latin American revolutions may refer to:
No previous Latin American revolution has had such broad religious support as that of the Sandinistas.
In the world of Latin American revolutions, Salvadoran rebels have long exuded the ideological orthodoxy of true believers.
"In Latin America," he said, "there have been a lot of revolutions, so we thought that it was just a normal Latin American revolution."
Argentina, described by some as "the poster boy of the Latin American economic revolution", came crashing down in 2002.
All Latin American revolutions will end up like ours, Mr. Carrión had said, and he was right, although for a larger reason than he believed.
Most of their colonies had acquired independence during the Latin American revolutions at the beginning of the 19th century.
These Latin American revolutions start in the country side and move toward the urban areas, like an Eastern revolution (Dix 1983).
Castro had been hoping that Venezuela would be the second act of the Latin American revolution and he tried to supply the Venezuelan guerrillas.